dry land discoveries – news archive 2002
text translation service for 25 worldwide languages
This
archive is about the various discoveries in 2002 which have helped to
create the ‘paradigm shift’
in the historical sciences that characterises the ‘new
appreciation’ of the ancient world
The Morien Institute welcomes contributions from everywhere in the world. Wherever you are, if your traditional prehistory has been challenged by new discoveries, please send us the press reports
webpage URLs and magazine stories …
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December 6 2002 – National Geographic News
“Was Maya Pyramid Designed to Chirp Like a Bird?”
“Clap your hands in front of the 1,100-year-old Temple of Kukulcan, in the ancient Mayan city of Chichen Itza, and, to some researchers’ ears, the pyramid answers in the voice of the sacred quetzal bird.
‘Now I have heard echoes in my life, but this was really strange,’ says David Lubman, an acoustical engineer who runs his own firm in Westminster, California. The Maya, he believes, may have built their pyramids to create specific sound effects.
A handclap at the base of Kukulcan’s staircase generates what Lubman calls a ‘chirped echo’ a ‘chir-roop’ sound that first ascends and then falls, like the cry of the native quetzal.
To Lubman, the dimensions of Kukulcan’s steps suggest that the builders intended just such an acoustical mimicry. The lower steps have a short tread length and high risertough to climb but perfect for producing a high-pitched ‘chir’ sound. The steps higher up make a lower-pitched ‘roop.’”
…
December 6 2002 – CNN.com
“Star sheds light on African ‘Stonehenge'”
“Mysterious ruins in Zimbabwe, nearly brushed this week by the shadow of a total solar eclipse, once served as an astronomical observatory to track eclipses, solstices and an elusive exploding star, a South African scientist said. The Great Enclosure in the archaeological site of Great Zimbabwe, a crumbling ring of stone walls and platforms about 250 meters in circumference, was thought to have been a palace complex for regional rulers some 800 years ago.
But Richard Wade of the Nkwe Ridge Observatory thinks that the enclosure was used in a similar capacity as the much older Stonehenge in Great Britain. The arrangement of the walls, the complicated symbols on stone monoliths and the position of a tall tower suggest that medieval Zimbabweans used the complex to track the moon, sun, planets and stars for centuries.”
December 4 2002 – The New Scientist
“Eclipse brings claim of medieval African observatory”
“Viewers of the total solar eclipse in Southern Africa early on Wednesday have also had their eyes opened by second startling event – newly released evidence that a medieval African site was an astronomical observatory.
Starting just before 0600 GMT, the shadow of the Moon took 30 minutes to cross Africa from west to east, before heading over the Indian Ocean to make landfall in western Australia around 0900 GMT. In Africa, between 0610 and 0620, the shadow crossed the southern tip of Zimbabwe, not far from the mysterious stone ruins of Great Zimbabwe, from which the country took its name.
Great Zimbabwe, built in about 1200 AD is a perplexing UN world heritage site. At its heart is the Great Enclosure – a wall comprised of over 5000 cubic metres of stone and marking a perimeter 240 metres in length. Archaeologists had assumed it was once a royal residence. But on Wednesday, archaeologist-astronomer Richard Wade, of the Nkwe Ridge Observatory, South Africa, presented his new evidence. He claims Great Zimbabwe was similar in function to Stonehenge in England, though much younger.”
November 12 2002 – The Irish Examiner
“Huge temple found under Hill of Tara “
“A HUGE temple, once surrounded by about 300 huge posts made from an
entire oak forest, has been discovered directly beneath the Hill of Tara
in Co Meath. Conor Newman, an archaeology lecturer at NUI Galway, said
the discovery at the ancient site made sense of the positioning of other
graves and monuments in the area. Mr
Newman, who has been working on the Hill of Tara under the State-funded
Discovery Programme since 1992, was delighted by the find. “It
fills a very important place in the jigsaw because it allows us to make
sense of the distribution of other monuments all around it.”
November 11 2002 – Northern Light/EFE
“Archaeologists report discovery of “lost city” in Nicaragua”
“Managua, Nov 11, 2002 (EFE via COMTEX) — Spanish and Nicaraguan archaeologists
have found what they believe is ‘a lost city’
in the jungles of southern Nicaragua, the local press reported. Remnants
of what appear to have been ‘a settlement dating
back more than 2,000 years’ are located near the town of Kukra
Hill, 650 kilometers (405 miles) southeast
of Managua, El Nuevo Diario reported Sunday. Kukra Hill is a town in Nicaragua’s
Caribbean region that is surrounded by jungle and only accessible by boat
or airplane”
October 8 2002 – National Geographic News
“Over 1000 new ‘geoglyphs’ discovered on Peruvian Nasca desert”
“Human and animal likenesses, a knife, and a sundial are among the “geoglyphs”, or giant figures etched into the earth and discernible from the sky, most recently discovered in the Peruvian desert. Peruvian archaeologist Johny Islas and German colleague Markus Reindel have identified new etchings made by the ancient Nasca people in the desert valleys of Palpa, about 460 kilometers (290 miles) south of Lima. After five years of work, the scientists were able to identify more than 1,000 new geoglyphs …”
“Digital Cuneiform Library Initiative”
On May
17 2002 a report on Newsday.com
brought news from AP that the “Digital Cuneiform
Library Initiative”, a project begun in 1998 by concerned
historians, is now available to students with an Internet connection.
These 4,000-year-old tablets, containing what is thought to be the world’s
earliest known written documents, are felt to be in great danger of disappearing
altogether if they are not catalogued electronically in the very near
future.
“About 120,000 cuneiform tablets from the third millennium B.C. are
scattered throughout the world. Thousands more are plundered each year
in Iraq and dumped on the world antiquities market. Tablets even show
up on Web auction site eBay, where bidding can start at $1.”
Steve Tinney,
of the University of Pennsylvania, which is compiling a Web-based dictionary
of Sumerian, the first written language, told the AP about the digitisation
project:
“It’s simply going to change the way we work because access to these
texts is slow and painful and can involve traveling thousands of miles
to see. That changing to just a click away is going to be huge,”
The texts
conatin the earliest known creation myths, legal codes, medical prescriptions
and recipes for beer. Most, however, are more mundane and include ledgers,
deeds, receipts and lists of everything from types of birds to musical
instruments and the woods used to make them, and record how people lived,
labored, ruled and wrote for millennia in ancient Mesopotamia.
The library
focuses on tablets created by scribes during writing’s first millennium,
roughly 3300 B.C. to 2000 B.C. The writing looks like a series of little
wedges connected by lines, and the term “cuneiform”
means “wedge-shaped”.
They are
available to students on the Net at: http://www.cdli.ucla.edu/
underwater discoveries news archive
4,500 year old“King of Stonehenge” found?”
In what
could turn out to be one of the most important discoveries in recent years,
a team of arch?ologists from Wessex Archaeology have announced the discovery
of an Early Bronze Age burial that is proving to be ‘very
rich’ in artifacts. Dated to around 2,300 BC, the site
has so far yielded ten times the number of artifacts that are usually
found in such burials, and the skeleton has been named “The
Amesbury Archer” due to the arrowheads that have been uncovered
with him. It has been described as the “richest
Early Bronze Age burial in Britain”.
According
to the report in BBC
Online May 16 2002, dozens of unique artifacts including “gold
earrings”, and “bronze age
weapons” have been found in what may be a prehistoric chieftain’s
grave, and may even be the grave of a king..
Copyright 2002 BBC Online |
Discovered in the sleepy Wiltshire village of Amesbury, which also gives the ‘archer’ his name, it was first uncovered during routine excavations for a new school development.
“Excavators have described finding a ‘dazzling’ array of grave goods including copper knives, pottery beakers, flint tools and stone wristguards.” Study of the artifacts is expected to reveal much about Bronze Age society during the period when Stonehenge was being built. |
The skeleton
of a man between 30 and 40 years of age had wristguards to protect his
arm from the recoil of the bow.
The area
around Stonehenge is well known for Bronze Age burials, and also for the
number of megalithic sites, including the enormous stone circles of Avebury
a few miles away. The gold
earrings are believed to have been wrapped around the ear, rather
than hanging from the ear lobe, and television news items that evening
described the archer
as most definiteley a “wealthy man, possibly
a chieftain or maybe even a king”. Could this be the King
of Stonehenge?
The story
had featured the previous day on the Ananova
news service, which quoted Dr Andrew Fitzpatrick, the project
manager for Wessex Archaeology:
“As well as the archery equipment, the man has three copper knives
and a pair of gold earrings … These are some of the earliest kinds of
metal object found in Britain. They were very rare and the metals they
were made from may have been imported. The fact that so many valuable
objects have been found together is unique.”
The find was
described by Andrew Lawson, Chief Executive for Wessex
Archaeology, as being several hundred years earlier than any other
Bronze Age site in the Stonehenge area.
Their website
claims that is, by far, the most well-furnished Beaker burial yet discovered
in Britain, and that Beaker burials have often been considered ‘rich’
if they contain four or five objects, only one of which is made of copper,
bronze or gold. It added that all the finds so far are typical of the
well-known types which form the ‘Beaker package’
that has been found across much of central and western Europe:
“In a British context the gold earrings (or perhaps
tress ornaments) are rare, with only half a dozen other findspots
known. The association of three tanged knives – almost certainly of copper
rather than bronze – is without parallel, as is the number of Beakers
from a single burial. The range of arrowheads, bracers, flints, and spatula
are amongst the largest groups of archery equipment found together. The
burial dates to the second half of the third millennium and perhaps nearer
to 2,500 cal. BC rather than 2,000 cal. BC, say 2,300 BC.”
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